Afterword

All’n’none theory explains the basis of existence and pre-objective reality and shows how the reality goes far beyond matter. This theory shows how all beings arose from the function of consciousness on data content and explains the concept of added value as the transcendence of consciousness, and then the transcendence of consciousness as synonymous with greater existence. All’n’none theory links not only physics and hard science together, but also many metaphysical subjects outside of science and philosophy. It associates with the truth of the scientific approach to phenomena such as existence and death, which formerly contemplated to unscientific and metaphysical. The book's scientific materials are free of distortion and error, however, its overall idea seems to have been inspired by the theories of Lawrence Krauss, Christopher Hitchens, and Richard Dawkins, with the exception that All'n'none approach to the final conclusion is quite different. Both in terms of laying out the subject, as well as explaining the conclusion, which comes in a completely scientific and provable approach, and in proving the theory from the point of view of religion, it distinguishes All’n’none from the rest. In particular, the author has tried to retell religious manuscripts in the language of science, and not necessarily as an indisputable principle just to draw a certain conclusions from. Of course, the evaluation of the section related to religious is the responsibility of experts in the field of religious sciences. All’n’none considers the universe to be a systematic machine in which man - like other beings - has entered into as one of its subordinate systems, and its conservation depends on its ability to maintain symmetry of the entire system, and otherwise; it will not stay here for long. There’ll be no way out: it either rises or falls. He sees man as a "complex" part that exists within an interconnected network in the universe. According to him, complex systems function under the influence of their subordinate members activities, and at the same time, they are also subordinate members of higher systems that are connected to each other by an amalgam called symmetry that through consciousness form their own conservation. The book focuses on psychological sub-disciplines and their connection to religion, science, philosophy, as well as modern mystical and spiritual concepts, not just in a certain geographical region, but all around the universe. The author examines ideas that have influenced human history, including his own worldview; Jainism epistemology, Jungian critiques, Cartesian rationalism, Islamic reforms and Sufi Mysticism. And then re-examining all key disciplines in the fields of Jewish philosophy. This book invites scholars and students of philosophy, intellectual history, theology, religious studies, and hard science, and challenges all to debate.